The North London football club wants the London Overground station renamed Tottenham Hotspur station ahead of the opening of its new £400m stadium.

It's not the first time a football club has renamed a station. Tottenham’s biggest rivals Arsenal also renamed a station back in 1932 – turning Gillespie Road underground station into Arsenal, with its location right beside their old Highbury stadium.

According to Squawka, Spurs are keen for the station to remain strongly identified with the club, particularly as there are plans for a walkway leading directly to the ground. And TfL would be prepared to change the name, but want Spurs to pay a fee and meet all associated costs - that includes changing signage and maps.

In total, that could come to £12m - though TfL and Tottenham wouldn't comment.

Station name changes have proved controversial before. When it was announced the Crossrail service would be named the Elizabeth Line, some dismissed it as a vanity exercise, with speculation over how much it would cost.

And last summer Walthamstow Central ran into slight trouble when its name was misspelled on several prominent signs. The north east London rail hub had been renamed “Waltamstow Central” as part of renovation work undertaken to mark the London Overground’s takeover of a main line route through the station.

They were hastily replaced but not before passers-by took to Twitter to ridicule the mistake.